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Outside The Cat Geniculate Nucleus Neurons Classical Receptive Field With The Classic Feel The Wild Sub-district Spatial Response Characteristics And Their Interactions

Posted on:2005-01-18Degree:DoctorType:Dissertation
Country:ChinaCandidate:C SunFull Text:PDF
GTID:1110360125967498Subject:Neurobiology
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
The spatial properties of the extraclassical receptive fields (ECRF) of neurons responding to a stimulus restricted to it and its interaction with the classical receptive field (CRF) in visual information processing were investigated in 74 relay cells in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGNd) of anesthetized cats. The results demonstrate that the ECRF of most relay cells in the LGNd responded preferentially to a grating stimulus of low spatial frequency through a mechanism of spatial summation. These biased cells showed a significant orientation bias which was relatively smaller than that of the CRF. The preferred orientations of the ECRF were not correlated with those of the CRF in most relay cells. The orientation biased ECRFs and CRFs interacted with each other in a non-linear way, resulting in a great diversity of response properties. Overall, the CRF played a more significant role than the ECRF in determining a cell's orientation bias and preferred orientation. The ECRF mostly showed a modulatory role mainly in suppressing and/or in partially facilitating the neural response to stimulation in the CRF although in some cases, the ECRF did determine a cell's responsiveness and orientation sensitivity. These results suggest that the ECRF might contribute to the ability of the LGNd neurons to detect some complex features such as texture segmentation and provide a subcortical contribution to the integrative field of visual cortical cells through receiving inputs from retinal ganglion cells with similar orientation biased extended surrounds(Shou et al., 2000).
Keywords/Search Tags:Extraclassical receptive field, Classical receptive field, Spatial frequency tuning, Orientation tuning, Dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus, Texture segmentation
PDF Full Text Request
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